| Dodece said: @madskillz You do realize communicating with a Sony fanatic is like discussing relativity with the mentally retarded. They apply no logical reasoning to their arguments, and instead invoke the magic power of a word. The way ancient Egyptians scrolled curses on their tomb walls. Thats what they mean when they say brand loyalty. They think it means there are over a hundred million loyal slaves waiting to purchase the PS3 at any instant if they could only afford it. So it is written so it must be. I too await the sales in a few weeks. Once four hundred dollar purchases once again become expensive purchases. Any guesses as to whom price consciousness hurts the most. The return of normal weekly sales highlighting just how long a overtake would actually take. Finally I want to see the effects to the delay station on gamer purchases. The Sony fanatics overcompensated through the holiday season, and a bitter January and February are on the way. Chances are Wii sales will still rocket, and the 360 will do better percentage wise just on price. Especially since its strongest market is the strongest market by volume. The only question is this will they crawl back under their stones when things begin to get a little rough. The next few months are going to be rough for Sony. No real exclusive third party content, and their console still costs more. |
Your entire post reeks of bias and "fanboyism", I really enjoy the part about you discussing a Sony fany's "logic" to arguments, when a 360 supporter bought a console with a stated 33% failure rate, no reliance on hard-drive support, no wifi or high def player from the get-go, and it's only major function is to "play games" in which Microsoft HUMBLY charges you a mere $60 a year to "play games" with other people (which was it's original strong point no?) >_>; I honest to god can't find any pro's in supporting the damn thing. Funny how that "logic" works though.
Well both consoles will take quite a hit after the holidays, but I love how you forget to realize that the prices will probably remain the same as they were comming into the holiday season. So let's all assume that the PS3 only took a "boost" from holiday season, in which the cheapest PS3 was $400 and the cheapest 360 was $250? Does that mean that at those price points more people wanted the PS3 in time for Christmas? What honestly makes you think they'll want it less than the 360 AFTER christmas? They'll be at the same prices they were before >_> Now if a parent is only willing to spend $400 at christmas to get their kid what they acutually want, let's hope for your sake that all these people will "settle" for the cheaper 360 after the holidays.
From 0 to KICKASS in .stupid seconds.







